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Article Abstract

Cardiovascular diseases are the number one cause of death globally. The most important determinant of cardiovascular health is a person's age. Aging results in structural changes and functional decline of the cardiovascular system. DNA damage is an important contributor to the aging process, and mice with a DNA repair defect caused by Ercc1 deficiency display hypertension, vascular stiffening, and loss of vasomotor control. To determine the underlying cause, we compared important hallmarks of vascular aging in aortas of both Ercc1 and age-matched wildtype mice. Additionally, we investigated vascular aging in 104 week old wildtype mice. Ercc1 aortas displayed arterial thickening, a loss of cells, and a discontinuous endothelial layer. Aortas of 24 week old Ercc1 mice showed phenotypical switching of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs), characterized by a decrease in contractile markers and a decrease in synthetic markers at the RNA level. As well as an increase in osteogenic markers, microcalcification, and an increase in markers for damage induced stress response. This suggests that Ercc1 VSMCs undergo a stress-induced contractile-to-osteogenic phenotype switch. Ercc1 aortas showed increased MMP activity, elastin fragmentation, and proteoglycan deposition, characteristic of vascular aging and indicative of age-related extracellular matrix remodeling. The 104 week old WT mice showed loss of cells, VSMC dedifferentiation, and senescence. In conclusion, Ercc1 aortas rapidly display many characteristics of vascular aging, and thus the Ercc1 mouse is an excellent model to evaluate drugs that prevent vascular aging in a short time span at the functional, histological, and cellular level.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11113264PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/acel.14126DOI Listing

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